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Moral Blackmail and the Family

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-09-01, 02:33 authored by Simon KellerSimon Keller
Moral blackmail is a wrongful strategy intended to force a person to perform an act by manipulating her circumstances so as to make it morally wrong for her to do anything else. The idea of moral blackmail can seem paradoxical, but moral blackmail is a coherent and indeed a familiar phenomenon. It has special significance for our intimate personal relationships and is often a force within family dynamics. It is used to enforce power relationships within families, and in particular to uphold expectations that women and girls will do most of the work in caring for vulnerable family members. It is also used as a tool of policy makers, to transfer to families duties of care that would otherwise be discharged by the government or by society at large. It is an important but under-recognized source of ongoing manipulation and exploitation.

History

Preferred citation

Keller, S. (2016). Moral Blackmail and the Family. Journal of Moral Philosophy, 13(6), 699-719. https://doi.org/10.1163/17455243-01306002

Journal title

Journal of Moral Philosophy

Volume

13

Issue

6

Publication date

2016-01-01

Pagination

699-719

Publisher

Brill

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

ISSN

1740-4681

eISSN

1745-5243

Language

en